hi St Man,
I used to Work for the Hot Dip Galvanizer Assositon of SA. (
http://www.hdgasa.co.za )
Most of what the other guys have said is correct.
in a nutshell:
0.02 - 3.9mm steel is normally pre-galvanized - this is a process where steel "drawn through" molten Zinc continually and then coiled. the martial is then unrolled again in flat sheets of metal that can then be shaped and formed: IBR, corrugated iron and light steel structure buildings, the steel sections used for dry walling and so on.
the reason the steel can be bent and shaped is because the Zinc coating is very thin and does not easily crack.
4mm and up - the steel is to thick to be coiled and shaped and is therefor used to fabricate into what ever structure and then sent for hot Dip Galvanizing.
as Retrovan mentioned, larger structures (especially with thinner steel sections) need additional strengthening in order to avoid distortion.
the reason a Land rover chassis are often Galvanized is because it is heavy steel. if you were to ?hot dip Galvanize a vehicle body, you are guaranteed to have zinc in every crevice and corner, but because of the large thin sections welded to the thicker pillars and chassis the distortion will be very bad. - i can show you many reports of structures that distort because of this design problem.
the process;
- take steel that has been cleaned (hidrochlaric acid, sand blasting)
- dip it in molten zinc (450 degree Celsius) for a few seconds and allow the metallurgical reaction to take place
- remove from the zinc and either - air cool
- quench in a passivization bath (an oily residue is left on the surface to protect against flash corrosion)
when you want to paint over Hot dip galvanizing (this is called a duplex coating) the passivization layer needs to be removed - (zinc iron cleaner - can get it f builders ware house/paint shop. sweep blasting (same a sand blasting, just at a much lower blasting temp with smaller grid).
a zinc compatible undercoat must be used and then the top coat or 2 or 3 - depending on the application.
The alternative is to fabricate your panes from pre galvanized sheet metal and weld it in place. obviously where you weld the zinc will burn off and you will not be able to protect it on the inside again. the outside can be coated with a zinc rich paint.
zinc protects carbon steel by slowly "sacrificial" itself. in other words if you cut a piece of corrugated iron, only the edge will show rust, but the rust will not "run". we have all seen on our VW's how the paint starts to "bubble" and if you scrape that off there is some nice rust???
because galvanizing is a metallurgical reaction and not just applied on top of the steel "under corrosion creep" is not possible.
anyway - enough of the Galvanizing lesson. I can give you all the information you could ever need form designing an item - all the way to repairing Hot Dip Galvanized items years after it was first coated.
moisture is the biggest contributor to metal rusting, so if you can prevent moisture from getting to the inside channels/ pillars, rust wont bother you. painting a panel before welding it seems pointless, but at least some of the inside panel will be protected and this will already help.
no matter what rust prevention you decide to go with: hot dip galvanizing, painting. electro-galvanizing, plating, electro-painting and and and....
PREPARATION IS THE KEY TO LONG LASTING CORROSION PROTECTION
Smaller components as Retrovan mentioned can easily be hot dip galvanized and will ensure long lasting protection.
i know i went on a bit.....